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Escala de Capacidade de Gestão do Conhecimento×Escala de Ambidestria Inovadora×
ÁreaGestão estratégicaGestão estratégica
FamíliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Ano de origem19951991
Autor originalIkujiro Nonaka and Hirotaka Takeuchi (SECI model); adapted by organizational scholarsJames G. March
TipoOrganizational self-report questionnaireOrganizational self-report questionnaire
Fonte seminalNonaka, I., & Takeuchi, H. (1995). The knowledge-creating company: How Japanese companies create the dynamics of innovation. Oxford University Press. link ↗March, J. G. (1991). Exploration and exploitation in organizational learning. Organization Science, 2(1), 71–87. DOI ↗
Outros nomesKM Capability Scale, Knowledge Management Maturity ScaleAmbidexterity Scale, Exploration-Exploitation Scale
Relacionados55
ResumoKnowledge Management (KM) refers to the organizational capacity to create, capture, organize, and apply knowledge to improve organizational effectiveness, innovation, and decision-making. Nonaka and Takeuchi's (1995) knowledge-creating company framework conceptualized knowledge as moving through four conversion modes: socialization (tacit to tacit knowledge transfer through experience), externalization (tacit knowledge articulation into explicit forms), combination (explicit knowledge assembly into systems), and internalization (explicit knowledge absorption into tacit understanding). This scale measures organizational capability across the four KM processes—knowledge creation, capture, sharing, and application—revealing where organizations excel or struggle in converting information into competitive advantage.Innovation Ambidexterity—the organizational capacity to simultaneously engage in exploration (pursuing radical, novel innovations) and exploitation (improving and extending existing products and processes)—is fundamental to sustained competitive advantage. March (1991) formalized this trade-off in Organization Science, arguing that organizations must balance the two to survive and thrive. Exploration alone leads to variety but insufficient returns; exploitation alone leads to competence traps and vulnerability to disruption. This scale, operationalized by He and Wong (2004) and extended by Jansen et al. (2006), measures organizational capability in both domains and the degree to which firms balance competing innovation imperatives.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Knowledge Management Capability Scale · Innovation Ambidexterity Scale. Recuperado em 2026-06-18 de https://scholargate.app/pt/compare